- Mike Gottfried
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Mike Gottfried Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born December 17, 1944 Playing career 1962–1965 Morehead State Position(s) Quarterback Coaching career (HC unless noted) c. 1970
1975–1976
1977
1978–1980
1981–1982
1983–1985
1986–1989St. Paul HS (OH)
Cincinnati (assoc. HC)
Arizona (offensive backs)
Murray State
Cincinnati
Kansas
PittsburghHead coaching record Overall 76–55–4 (college)
50–19–1 (high school)Bowls 0–1 Tournaments 0–1 (NCAA D-I-AA playoffs) Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Accomplishments and honors Championships 1 OVC (1979) Mike Gottfried (born December 17, 1944) is a sportscaster and former American football player and coach in the United States. Gottfried is currently a college football color analyst and color commentator for ESPN. He served as the head football coach at Murray State University (1978–1980), the University of Cincinnati (1981–1982), the University of Kansas (1983–1985), and the University of Pittsburgh (1986–1989), compiling a career college football record of 76–55–4. Gottfried played college football at Morehead State University as a quarterback from 1962 to 1965. Before moving to the college coaching ranks, he coached high school football in Ohio, tallying a mark of 50–19–1.[1] Gottfried is the uncle of Mark Gottfried, the current head men's basketball coach at North Carolina State University.
Gottfried's autobiography, entitled Coach's Challenge: Faith, Football, and Filling the Father Gap and co-written by Ron Benson, was released on September 11, 2007. Gottfried and his wife, Mickey, founded Team Focus in 2000. It is a cost-free community outreach program aimed at young men without fathers. The program goal is to give opportunities for all team members to be "motivated, encouraged, and challenged". Mike felt drawn to start Team Focus because he lost his father at age eleven, and understood the difficulty and hardships young men without fathers feel. There is also a group for females called G.I.R.L.S. Network.
Contents
Head coaching record
College
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Murray State Racers (Ohio Valley Conference) (1978–1980) 1978 Murray State 4–7 1–5 T–5th 1979 Murray State 9–2–1 6–0 1st L NCAA Division I-AA Semifinal 1980 Murray State 9–2 5–2 T–2nd Murray State: 22–11–1 12–7 Cincinnati Bearcats (NCAA Division I-A Independent) (1981–1982) 1981 Cincinnati 6–5 1982 Cincinnati 6–5 Cincinnati: 12–10 Kansas Jayhawks (Big Eight Conference) (1983–1985) 1983 Kansas 4–6–1 2–5 T–6th 1984 Kansas 5–6 4–3 4th 1985 Kansas 6–6 2–5 6th Kansas: 15–18–1 8–13 Pittsburgh Panther (NCAA Division I-A Independent) (1986–1989) 1986 Pittsburgh 6–4–1 1987 Pittsburgh 8–4 L Bluebonnet 1988 Pittsburgh 6–5 1989 Pittsburgh 7–3–1[n 1] John Hancock[n 1] Pittsburgh: 27–16–2 Total: 76–55–4 National Championship Conference Title Conference Division Title Notes
- ^ a b Paul Hackett coached Pittsburgh in the John Hancock Bowl.
References
- ^ "New Wildcat coach lists grid staffers". Kingman Daily Miner. December 22, 1976. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=R0RTAAAAIBAJ&sjid=zIUDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6840,7119053. Retrieved January 25, 2011.
External links
Murray State Racers head football coaches Irby Koffman (1924) • Carlisle Cutchin (1925–1930) • Ray Morgan (1931) • Roy Stewart (1932–1940) • Jim Moore (1941) • No team (1943) • Roy Stewart (1944–1945) • Jim Moore (1946–1947) • Fred Faurot (1948–1955) • Jim Cullivan (1956–1959) • Don Shelton (1960–1966) • Bill Furgerson (1967–1977) • Mike Gottfried (1978–1980) • Frank Beamer (1981–1986) • Mike Mahoney (1987–1992) • Houston Nutt (1993–1996) • Denver Johnson (1997–1999) • Joe Pannunzio (2000–2005) • Matt Griffin (2006–2009) • Chris Hatcher (2010– )
Cincinnati Bearcats head football coaches No coach (1885–1893) • W. Durant Berry (1894–1895) • William A. Reynolds (1896) • Tom Fennell (1897) • Frank Cavanaugh (1898) • Daniel A. Reed (1899–1900) • Henry S. Pratt (1901) • Anthony Chez (1902–1903) • Amos Foster (1904–1905) • William Foley (1906) • No team (1907) • Ralph Inott (1908) • Robert Burch (1909–1911) • Lowell Dana (1912–1913) • George Little (1914–1915) • Ion Cortright (1916) • Frank Marty (1917) • Boyd Chambers (1918–1921) • George McLaren (1922–1926) • George Babcock (1927–1930) • Dana M. King (1931–1934) • Russ Cohen (1935–1937) • Wade Woodworth # (1937) • Joe Meyer (1938–1942) • No team (1943–1944) • Ray Nolting (1945–1948) • Sid Gillman (1949–1954) • George Blackburn (1955–1960) • Chuck Studley (1961–1966) • Homer Rice (1967–1968) • Ray Callahan (1969–1972) • Tony Mason (1973–1976) • Ralph Staub (1977–1980) • Mike Gottfried (1981–1982) • Watson Brown (1983) • Dave Currey (1984–1988) • Tim Murphy (1989–1993) • Rick Minter (1994–2003) • Mark Dantonio (2004–2006) • Brian Kelly (2006–2009) • Jeff Quinn # (2009) • Butch Jones (2010– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Kansas Jayhawks head football coaches Will Coleman (1890) • Edwin Mortimer Hopkins (1891) • A. W. Shepard (1892–1893) • Hector Cowan (1894–1896) • Wylie G. Woodruff (1897–1898) • Fielding H. Yost (1899) • Charles Boynton (1900) • John H. Outland (1901) • Arthur Hale Curtis (1902) • Boss Weeks (1903) • A. R. Kennedy (1904–1910) • Ralph W. Sherwin (1911) • Arthur Mosse (1912–1913) • H. M. Wheaton (1914) • Herman Olcott (1915–1917) • Jay Bond (1918) • Leon McCarty (1919) • Phog Allen (1920) • George Clark (1921–1925) • Franklin Cappon (1926–1927) • Homer Woodson Hargiss (1928–1932) • Adrian Lindsey (1932–1938) • Gwinn Henry (1939–1942) • Henry Shenk (1943–1945) • George Sauer (1946–1947) • Jules V. Sikes (1948–1953) • Chuck Mather (1954–1957) • Jack Mitchell (1959–1966) • Pepper Rodgers (1967–1970) • Don Fambrough (1971–1974) • Bud Moore (1975–1978) • Don Fambrough (1979–1982) • Mike Gottfried (1983–1985) • Bob Valesente (1986–1987) • Glen Mason (1988–1996) • Terry Allen (1997–2001) • Mark Mangino (2002–2009) • Turner Gill (2010– )
Pittsburgh Panthers head football coaches No coach (1890–1892) • Anson Harrold (1893) • No coach (1894) • J. P. Linn (1895) • George W. Hoskins (1896) • Thomas Trenchard (1897) • Frederick A. Robinson (1898–1899) • Roy Jackson (1900) • Wilbur Hockensmith (1901) • Fred Crolius (1902) • Arthur Mosse (1903–1905) • Edgar Wingard (1906) • John A. Moorehead (1907–1908) • Joseph H. Thompson (1909–1912) • Joseph Duff (1913–1914) • Pop Warner (1915–1923) • Jock Sutherland (1924–1938) • Charley Bowser (1939–1942) • Clark Shaughnessy (1943–1945) • Wes Fesler (1946) • Mike Milligan (1947–1949) • Len Casanova (1950) • Tom Hamilton (1951) • Red Dawson (1952–1954) • Tom Hamilton (1954) • John Michelosen (1955–1965) • David Hart (1966–1968) • Carl DePasqua (1969–1972) • Johnny Majors (1973–1976) • Jackie Sherrill (1977–1981) • Foge Fazio (1982–1985) • Mike Gottfried (1986–1989) • Paul Hackett (1989–1992) • Sal Sunseri # (1992) • Johnny Majors (1993–1996) • Walt Harris (1997–2004) • Dave Wannstedt (2005–2010) • Phil Bennett # (2010) • Todd Graham (2011– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.ESPN College Football Saturday Primetime Play-by-Play Analyst Mike Gottfried (1990-2004) • Bob Davie (2005) • Todd Blackledge (2006-present)Sideline Reporter Adrian Karsten (1990-2003) • Erin Andrews (2004, 2009) • Holly Rowe (2005-2008, 2010-present)ESPN • College Football on ESPN Categories:- 1944 births
- Living people
- American football quarterbacks
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- Arizona Wildcats football coaches
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- Morehead State Eagles football players
- Murray State Racers football coaches
- Pittsburgh Panthers football coaches
- High school football coaches in the United States
- College football coaches first appointed in the 1970s stubs
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